Today’s song of the day comes from tonight’s #FridayNightFlix.
Today’s song of the day comes from tonight’s #FridayNightFlix.
Today would have been Max von Sydow’s 97th birthday. In today’s scene that I love, von Sydow plays a disarmingly polite assassin.
From 1975’s Three Days of the Condor:
4 Or More Shots From 4 Or More Films is just what it says it is, 4 shots from 4 of our favorite films. As opposed to the reviews and recaps that we usually post, 4 Shots From 4 Films lets the visuals do the talking!
Today, the Shattered Lens wishes a happy early birthday to German director Uli Edel, who will be turning 79 tomorrow! It’s time for….
4 Shots from 4 Uli Edel Films
Welcome to Late Night Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Thursdays, I will be reviewing Highway to Heaven, which aired on NBC from 1984 to 1989. The entire show is currently streaming on Tubi and several other services!
This week, we finish up Highway to Heaven.
Episode 5.13 “Merry Christmas from Grandpa”
(Dir by Michael Landon, originally aired on August 4th, 1989)
The final episode of Highway to Heaven is a sad one for a number of reasons.
First off, it’s a Christmas episode but, because NBC never really gave the final season a regular spot on the schedule and instead of just aired the final 13 episodes whenever they needed to fill a hole, the finale didn’t air until August.
Secondly, the episode features Mark and Jonathan going “thirty years into the future,” — in this case to 2018. Mark is stunned to discover that he’s still alive in 2018. Jonathan tells him that it’s because he finally stopped smoking. In real life, Victor French died of lung cancer six months after filming this episode. Again, because of the way NBC handled the final season, French did not live to see the final episode aired.
Finally, the final episode of Highway to Heaven is not one of its strongest episodes. The strength of Highway to Heaven was that Jonathan and Mark spent their time helping ordinary people. Even if you didn’t agree with the show’s theology, it was hard not be touched by the earnest sincerity that lay at the heart of the majority of the episodes. Jonathan and Mark were do-gooders, in the best sense of the term.
That said, there were more than a few episodes that could be a bit preachy and that’s the case with this episode. As was often the case with Highway to Heaven‘s weaker episodes, this episode was inspired by Landon’s own environmentalism. On Christmas Eve, Jonathan and Mark visit three men — a businessman, a farmer, and the President (seriously!) — and bring with them visions of the future. The businessman sees that he has to stop promoting nuclear power. The farmer sees that he has to stop using insecticides. And the President watches as all of his future grandchildren and great-grandchildren vanish from existence as a result of him not doing something to protect the environment.
It’s heartfelt, yes. I don’t doubt Landon’s sincerity. But I just wish the final episode had been a bit more of a traditional episode. I wish that it had featured more of heart and the humor and the Landon/French chemistry that marked the show’s best moments. Of course, again, Landon had no way of knowing that Victor French was going to die. (Apparently, even though French does look noticeable thinner, he did not learn that he had lung cancer until after he filmed his last episode.) If the show had been renewed for another season, it’s doubtful it would have worked without the chemistry between Landon and French.
I’ve enjoyed reviewing this show. Originally, I didn’t think I would. I expected this show would bring out my cynical side with a vengeance and there were a few episodes that did just that. For the most part, though, this show won me over. Watching it, one gets the feeling that Michael Landon truly did want to make the world a better place. Who can’t be touched by that?
Next week, a new show will premiere here.
Welcome to Retro Television Reviews, a feature where we review some of our favorite and least favorite shows of the past! On Thursdays, I will be reviewing Decoy, which aired in Syndication in 1957 and 1958. The show can be viewed on Tubi!
This week, Casey investigates an underground gambling syndicate.
Episode 1.26 “Earthbound Satellites”
(Dir by Michael Gordon, aired on April 7th, 1958)
After a man shoots himself in the head over a $20,000 gambling debt, Casey goes undercover as a flighty socialite with a gambling problem. She meets George Courtney (Whitfield Connor), a rather dapper man who runs an underground casino. Courtney drives Casey to the casino but, along the way, he switches cars which makes it difficult for the police to tail him.
Later, at a debriefing, Casey expresses frustration that we can launch satellites into space but we can’t follow a car in Manhattan. Her boss is inspired to put a transmitter in her purse so that the police can follower her in Manhattan.
This episode was made at a time when transmitters and satellites were relatively new ideas and, as a result, a lot of time is spent on establishing the reality of technology that viewers today take for granted. That makes for somewhat slow episode and it also means that Casey doesn’t really get to do as much as usual in this episode. If anything, Casey almost comes across as being a bit incompetent, allowing the bad guys to get their hands on both the transmitter and her gun.
This wasn’t the most exciting episode of Decoy but Whitefield Connor did a good job in the role of the charming but amoral George Courtney. Casey seemed to be truly sad at the end of the episode. George had so much going for him but, in the end, he sacrificed his freedom for his own greed.
“Jakey, Jakey, big mistakey,” the bad guy says at one point during 2015’s Story of Eva and if that doesn’t tell you everything you need to know about this film, I don’t know what to tell you.
Eva (Nicole Rio) is the mother of teenage Amber (Chelsea London Lloyd). After Amber is murdered by a serial killer who also works as a human trafficker, Eva decides to get revenge. First, however, she has to train herself to not only inflict pain but to also handle it. She finds Amber’s stash and starts smoking it. She wears a ball gag. She whips herself. She learns how to handle pain. She uses Amber’s college fund to buy a membership at the gym and takes boxing lessons. And she builds her own little dungeon. Whenever Eva captures a criminal, she turns into Evil Eva and is even played by a different actress, Shawn Craig. Eva is one of those vigilantes who can’t punish an evil-doer without delivering an endless monologue. The script is talky in the way that scripts written by first-timers determined to prove their cleverness often are.
“No child should ever suffer!” Eva — in “good” form — announces before then adding, “What kind of God would allow that?” Thunder rumbles in the background and it’s not for the first or the only time in the movie as Eva views herself as having become a vengeful God. I have to admit that I appreciated the fact that the film was so shamelessly overwrought and overdone. Everything about the the move is over-the-top and yet, oddly, it’s still rather dull. Some of it is that fact that we live in a post-Hostel world. Torture chambers just don’t carry the same jolt that they once did.
Eric Roberts plays a detective who is investigating all of the murders. He is named Detective Wood. His partner (Rico Ross) is named Detective Grind and the fact that there was no one named Detective Bump seems like a missed opportunity. Roberts appears in a handful of scenes and brings some welcome wit to the role.
Previous Eric Roberts Films That We Have Reviewed:
The lineup for this year’s Cannes film festival was announced earlier today. There’s only one American film in the official competition. We’re all rooting for you, Ira Sachs!
Here’s the line-up:
Opening film:
LA VÉNUS ÉLECTRIQUE
Pierre SALVADORI
(Out of Competition)
Competition:
AMARGA NAVIDAD Pedro ALMODÓVAR
PARALLEL TALES Asghar FARHADI
A WOMAN’S LIFE Charline BOURGEOIS-TACQUET
LA BOLA NEGRA Javier CALVO & Javier AMBROSSI
COWARD Lukas DHONT
DAS GETRÄUMTE ABENTEUER Valeska GRISEBACH
ALL OF SUDDEN HAMAGUCHI Ryusuke
THE UNKNOWN Arthur HARARI
ANOTHER DAY Jeanne HERRY
SHEEP IN THE BOX KORE-EDA Hirokazu
HOPE NA Hong-jin
NAGI NOTES FUKADA Koji
GENTLE MONSTER Marie KREUTZER
NOTRE SALUT Emmanuel MARRE
FJORD Cristian MUNGIU
THE BIRTHDAY PARTY Léa MYSIUS
MOULIN László NEMES
FATHERLAND Pawel PAWLIKOWSKI
THE MAN I LOVE Ira SACHS
EL SER QUERIDO (THE BELOVED) Rodrigo SOROGOYEN
MINOTAUR Andrey ZVYAGINTSEV
Un Certain Regard
TEENAGE SEX AND DEATH AT CAMP MIASMA Jane SCHOENBRUN
Opening Film
ELEPHANTS IN THE FOG Abinash
BIKRAM SHAH 1st film
IRON BOY Louis CLICHY
BEN’IMANA Marie-Clémentine DUSABEJAMBO
1st film
CONGO BOY Rafiki FARIALA
CLUB KID Jordan FIRSTMAN
1st film
UĻA Viesturs KAIRIŠS
LA MÁS DULCE (STRAWBERRIES) Laïla MARRAKCHI
EL DESHIELO (THE MELTDOWN) Manuela MARTELLI
SIEMPRE SOY TU ANIMAL MATERNO (FOREVER YOUR MATERNAL ANIMAL) Valentina MAUREL
YESTERDAY THE EYE DIDN’T SLEEP Rakan MAYASI
I’LL BE GONE IN JUNE Katharina RIVILIS
1st film
WORDS OF LOVE Rudi ROSENBERG
EVERYTIME Sandra WOLLNER
ALL THE LOVERS IN THE NIGHT SODE Yukiko
Out of Competition
LA BATAILLE DE GAULLE : L’ÂGE DE FER Antonin BAUDRY
KARMA Guillaume CANET
DIAMOND Andy GARCIA
L’ABANDON Vincent GARENQ
L’OBJET DU DÉLIT Agnès JAOUI
HER PRIVATE HELL Nicolas WINDING REFN
Midnight Screenings
FULL PHIL Quentin DUPIEUX
SANGUINE Marion LE CORROLLER
1st film
ROMA ELASTICA Bertrand MANDICO
JIM QUEEN Marco NGUYEN & Nicolas ATHANÉ
1st film
GUN-CHE (COLONY) YEON Sang-ho
Cannes Première
LA TROISIÈME NUIT Daniel AUTEUIL
THE MATCH Juan CABRAL & Santiago FRANCO
KOKUROJO (THE SAMURAI AND THE PRISONER) KUROSAWA Kiyoshi
HEIMSUCHUNG (VISITATION) Volker SCHLÖNDORFF
PROPELLER ONE-WAY NIGHT COACH John TRAVOLTA
Special Screenings
REHEARSALS FOR A REVOLUTION Pegah AHANGARANI
1st film
LES MATINS MERVEILLEUX Avril BESSON
1st film
L’AFFAIRE MARIE-CLAIRE Lauriane ESCAFFRE & Yvo MULLER
AVEDON Ron HOWARD
LES SURVIVANTS DU CHE Christophe Dimitri RÉVEILLE
1st film
JOHN LENNON : THE LAST INTERVIEW Steven SODERBERGH
CANTONA David TRYHORN & Ben NICHOLAS
Hi, everyone! Tonight, on Mastodon, I will be hosting the #TubiThursday watch party! Join us for Cocktail (1988)!
You can find the movie on Tubi and you can join us on Mastodon at 9 pm central time! (That’s 10 pm for you folks on the East Coast.) We will be using #TubiThursday hashtag! See you then!
Today, the Shattered Lens wishes a happy birthday to Dennis Quaid!
This scene that I love comes from 1983’s The Right Stuff and features Quaid as astronaut Gordon Cooper. In this scene, the famous grin is flashed when Cooper is asked to name the best pilot that he ever saw. However, Cooper surprises everyone by turning thoughtful.